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May 28, 2014

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Ukraine takes back airport at Donetsk

UKRAINE said yesterday it had regained control of the airport in the eastern city of Donetsk after a day of punishing air strikes and fierce fighting with pro-Moscow separatist gunmen left dozens of people dead.

Russian President Vladimir Putin immediately called on Ukraine to end its “punitive” operation in the rebel-held east and for talks between Kiev and the insurgents.

The battle for the main transport hub in Ukraine’s industrial heartland erupted on Monday just hours after president-elect Petro Poroshenko vowed to take a tough stand against the “terrorists.”

“The airport is under our full control. The enemy suffered heavy losses. We have none,” Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said in a statement.

However, he said the military was continuing its operation at the airport and journalists reported hearing sporadic gunfire and explosions during the morning.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe reported being unable to establish contact with a four-member observer team based in the city since Monday evening.

Donetsk Mayor Oleksandr Lukyanchenko told reporters that two civilians and 38 combatants had died. Rebel leaders suggested that the toll among their ranks could be higher.

One journalist reported seeing body parts and blood splattered near a bullet-riddled truck on the airport road, where makeshift blockades had been set up with dumper trucks and piles of tires.

Combat jets and helicopter gunships struck the airport terminal on Monday after it was seized by scores of gunmen just a day after Ukraine’s presidential election won by Poroshenko.

The strikes represented the most forceful action by Kiev yet in its battle to crush a bloody rebellion that has raged in the coal and steel belt since early April and threatened to tear the former Soviet state apart.

The military action has also revived tensions between Kiev and Moscow, which had initially said it was ready to work with the new leader of its western neighbor.

In his first comments on Ukraine since Sunday’s election, Putin called “for an immediate end to the military’s punitive operation in southeastern regions and the establishment of peaceful dialogue between Kiev and regional representatives.”

Poroshenko, a 48-year-old pro-Western chocolate tycoon, had said he was ready to engage with the Russian leadership and was optimistic a meeting with Putin could be arranged soon.

Yesterday, however, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov — who had said Moscow was open to “pragmatic dialogue” with the new leader — said a visit to Moscow by Poroshenko was “not being considered.”

Sunday’s election had been viewed as crucial if Ukraine was able to turn the page on months of turmoil that followed the February ousting of Kiev’s pro-Kremlin leadership by a pro-EU protest movement.




 

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